FURNITURE MAKING WITH AN
HISTORICAL TWIST

John Lawson displays the corner cupboard he designed and built of walnut recycled from a hundred
year old house.

"I started woodworking real early in life," said John Lawson as he shoved a piece of Osage
orange wood through a planer. "I always did like to work with tools, making chairs, tables and
things like that. I got a charge out of giving them away.

"I made toys for the kids back during the Depression. A lot of them would not have had any toys,
and I enjoyed making some kids happy. At Christmas it was the same thing. I don't know, it takes
something out of it when you just buy toys for kids. It makes you feel good to help a fellow man
out."

John did much more than make toys. He not only built his own house, but also made practically
every piece of furniture in it in his shop which he jokingly refers to as his "playhouse." Along with
woodworking John also made many of his own tools.

"My father kept busy carpentering. When I was twelve years old, I was doing about as much
work as the average man. That's the way people did in those days. If anything had to be done,
why, do it."

When John was twelve~ he and his father built their own version of a prefabricated barn. The
barn, which they built in the fall and winter of 1913-1914, is still standing south of New
Bloomfield. During the winter when the weather was bad they cut most of the wood in their barn,
particularly the framing. They cut every piece to fit, and bored the holes. In the spring when the
weather cleared up, they pinned the barn together with one inch wooden pins. This means of
fastening is called mortice and pin. They used very few nails in the barn except those used for the
rafters. The Lawsons had salvaged the majority of the framing in the barn from dikes used to
change the flow of the Missouri River in the 1800s.

John still uses wood that no one else wants. "I like to get pieces of wood that have some history. I
have a piece of wood that came out of the building William Jennings Bryan was born in. They tore
the old house down, and my brother-in-law was hauling dirt and pieces from the old house. I said,
'What would you do if you'd catch me carrying away some of this old lumber?' He said, 'Ever'
piece you carry away I won't have to haul.'"

[75]

Most of the furniture in John's house is built from recycled wood. Three years after he built his
house in 1928, he decided to fill an empty corner in his dining room with a corner cupboard. He
used walnut wood from an old house dating back over a hundred years which was supposedly
built by slave labor. When John was cleaning up the wood and making it into the cupboard, he
found cut or square nails. The fact that the wood had ax marks in both sides, showing that it was
split out with an ax instead of ripped out with a saw, also proved that the wood was quite old.

The lovely corner cupboard now stands in his dining room holding four shelves of antique dishes.
This cupboard has two unusual glass doors which form a rounded arch.

John made a lamp which sits on an end table in his living room from seventeen different pieces of
wood he recycled. After gluing all the pieces of wood together in a block, following a pattern he
designed, he turned the block on the lathe to form the base of the lamp. When making the lamp,
he numbered each piece of wood and wrote on a piece of paper the corresponding numbers telling
where each piece of wood came from.

Some of the woods used in the lamp are white oak, cherry, persimmon, white ash, red cedar,
sugar maple and native peach. Also there are several woods with a history. There is swamp
cypress from Fort Gibson in Oklahoma where John's wife's grandfather was stationed in the civil
War, wild cherry that was part of an old table taken in the War of 1812 and green poplar from
one of the first pool tables in Missouri. In addition, there are different historic pieces of black
walnut--one that was part of an old ox-cart that came with his grandfather from Virginia in 1843,
some from William Jennings Bryan's birthplace, a piece from an old jail house in Fulton, Missouri,
a piece of the old building where his grandfather homesteaded in 1843, and some that was once
part of the J.W. Curry house built with slave labor.

Besides being a beautiful and useful piece of furniture, the lamp is practically a history lesson of
central Missouri, as are other items he has made.

John made candle holders from historical woods. He made two from the old state capitol building
in Jefferson City which burned in 1909. He also made walnut candlesticks from part of an old
house his great-grandfather built in 1843.

He made a plant pedestal from the cloth beam--the part the woven material is rolled up on--from
the loom on which his great-grandmother wove wearing material for the family during the civil
War. Later his mother used the same loom to weave carpets.

John once salvaged enough wood from an old cherry tree that laid in a ditch for twelve years to make several pieces of furniture. One of
these is a useful plant stand. By loosening a nut the arms, which hold the plants, can be turned to
various positions to regulate the amount of sunlight the plants get. This device saves moving
plants from one window to another and makes it one of the more popular pieces of John's
furniture. He has made several of these plant stands for friends varying them in size and shape.

"I always wanted to make something somebody would want," said John. That is certainly true
about the chair he made for his brother. John designed and made an auxiliary set of arms for a
chair because his brother has two artificial hip joints and can use only the strength from his arms
to get out of a normal chair. When his brother tried to raise himself to a standing position, the
arms of the chair were behind and below him, making it hard to push himself up.

John designed the auxiliary arms seven inches higher and eleven inches longer than those of a
standard chair. With the new arms, when standing up his brother can put the whole load on his
arms and has full control of all his muscles. "When I first took it to my brother, he looked at the
arms. Directly he reached back, got a hold of the arms, and set down and jumped up again like
sitting on a pin. I believe we'd have to fight the old man to get that chair.

"I made a game table with over six-hundred pieces in it. It was for a benefit for the Shriner's
Hospital in Kansas City. They were in need of an addition to the children's hospital and they
needed something to sell. It was reported that it brought a little over four thousand dollars. I was
kind of proud of that.

[76]

John made other clocks like this one which he designed and built himself.

John always has a specific design in mind when he glues the pieces for the base of the lamp together.

John designed a lamp base for the Masons.

"I like to make things they say can't be done. It's more interesting to have a piece of something
that is interesting and is kind of a challenge to do. I don't always succeed. Every day I find
something I can't make once I've started. It doesn't help to get impatient when you're working on
something to get it done." Anyone seeing the beautiful designs and workmanship of his furniture
can tell John has well met his challenges plus some.

John made a grandfather clock using his own designs and patterns. "I just took a pencil and piece
of paper and began marking. I've drawn a few house plans and that helped. It's made out of the
same cherry tree that laid in the ditch."

John worked on the clock in his spare time for approximately three months. He made every piece
on the clock except the clockworks which has a moon that moves and is accurate with the
calendar. He made several other clocks like this one.

When someone brought an antique base rocker to him to repair, he liked the design so well he
copied the pattern and made seven or eight of them. After he finished the frame, he wove a seat
from venetian blind cord because it is stronger than regular webbing.

John has also designed and built the leaf table in his dining room using brackets instead of springs
to hold the leaves of the table in place when they are raised.

To add more space at his table he built an extension table exactly the height and width of his
dining room table. When he is entertaining a large group of people and needs extra room, he
places the extension next to the table with a tablecloth over it, creating one long table. When not
in use as the table extension, it is used as a buffet or side board.

Along with his furniture making, during World War II, John made metal parts for the united
States government.

"I made over fifteen thousand parts of one kind and twenty-five thousand parts of another for
Uncle Sam during World War II right out here in my workshop. I learned how just by trial and
error. They were screw-like affairs with a shoulder on them, and they had to be a certain depth. I
have no idea what they used them for. They just sent me a blueprint."

[77]

Not having the right tools didn't stop John. Whenever he didn't have a tool that he needed, he
would make it. "I made one to measure the depth of a hole to one thousandth of an inch. What is
it the Irishmen call it, a small smidgin of a little bit?"

Though now in poor health and in spite of the loss of two fingers in an accident in his shop so that
he doesn't work much any more, he still enjoys the things he has made, remembering the care that
he has put in each piece of furniture. He especially enjoys other's pleasure--the table he made for
the shriner's Hospital benefit, the special chair for his brother, and the toys he made for the
children during the Depression.

"I haven't done furniture making for the last year," he said. "My peepers don't work very good. I
can't see. Even my fingers started disappearing, but I've always found there is something a fellow
can giggle about if he just tries. Sometimes the game you're playing doesn't seem like much fun
when you're playing it, but have a little fun anyway and laugh out loud.